Jephthah And His Daughter
“And what shall I more say? for the time would fail me to tell of Gedeon, and of Barak, and of Samson, and of Jephthae; of David also, and Samuel, and of the prophets:”
Hebrews 11:32
The History
- Jephthah was a bastard son of Gilead, who lived with the 2½ tribes east of the Jordan River (1-3).
- His mother was a harlot, or strange woman, so that he was a motherless bastard child of Gilead.
- Gilead’s legitimate sons threw Jephthah out of the family to keep him from a share of the estate.
- Similar to David, Jephthah gathered other outcasts around him by leadership ability (I Sam 22:2).
- Jephthah was a mighty man of valor, a courageous and strong leader in fighting and warfare.
- When the Ammonites initiated war against Israel, the elders of Gilead sought out Jephthah (4-11).
- They knew he was a mighty man of valor, and they had no better man to lead against Ammon.
- Jephthah correctly asked these elders about the great change of heart toward him and why.
- The elders realized their appeal was rather weak, so they offered him to be head of all of Gilead.
- Jephthah confirms their offer by clarifying the terms with the elders in the name of the LORD.
- Jephthah did not undertake the office or campaign without religious solemnity before the LORD.
- Jephthah shows great discretion and makes two conciliatory attempts to avoid actual war (12-28).
- He firsts asks as to the reason for the conflict, and Ammon accuses Israel of taking their land.
- Jephthah explained Israel took the land from Sihon and the Amorites, not from the Ammonites.
- He reasoned, Jehovah dispossessed the Amorites for us to have it; why do you want to take it?
- He suggested they be happy with what Chemosh gave them; they would keep Jehovah’s land.
- He told him that Balak and others for 300 years allowed the lands de facto to become Israel’s.
- He plainly told the king of Ammon that he was wrong to prosecute such a war before the LORD.
- The king of Ammon did not respond to this kind and patient effort to avoid outright conflict.
- The Spirit of God came upon Jephthah to prepare him even more for the conflict before him (29-31).
- The LORD gave him leadership, strength, courage, and wit to raise an army against Ammon.
- Jephthah vowed to the LORD, an act of worship, if the LORD would help him (Gen 28:20-22).
- He promised to give to the LORD by burnt offering whatever came to meet him on his return.
- Jephthah wins a great victory by the LORD’s blessing and subdued Ammon and 20 cities (32-33).
- Jephthah was horrified for his daughter to meet him upon his successful return from the war (34-40).
- She was an only child: she came out excitedly to celebrate her father’s victory over Ammon!
- Jephthah is crushed to see his daughter, for his noble conscience will not allow altering his vow.
- His daughter, with a pious display of humility, told him to keep his vow for such a great victory!
- She asked for two months to mourn her virginity with friends before he would fulfill the vow.
- She returned at the appointed time, when her father fulfilled the vow; and she died a virgin.
- It began a custom in Israel for a four-day memorial to remember the daughter of Jephthah.
- The wicked men of Ephraim complained against Jephthah for not being invited to the battle (12:1-7).
- These profane people threatened to burn Jephthah’s house down over him for missing the war.
- Jephthah prosecuted the battle without Ephraim, because they had not responded to his call.
- Now a civil war was fought, and Jephthah destroyed 42,000 of the wicked Ephraimites.
- When the Ephraimites tried to escape over Jordan, the Gileadites proved them by pronunciation.
- Jephthah’s judgeship expanded to all Israel for six years, but then he died and was buried in Gilead.
The Vow
- There are numerous reasons to indicate that Jephthah probably did not kill and burn his daughter.
- She asked for two months to lament her virginity, not her death by a knife and burning (37-38).
- She did not lament not giving children to her father or dying childless, but being a virgin (37-38).
- The Spirit’s explanation as to the fulfillment of the vow was not knowing a man, virginity (39).
- The Holy Spirit’s explanation is not that Jephthah died childless, but that she was a virgin (39).
- He likely dedicated her to virginity and perpetual service to the Lord at the tabernacle in Shiloh.
- Simply marrying a priest would not be enough, for her life would be no unusual sacrifice to God.
- Samuel is an example of being devoted to the Lord for the rest of his life (I Samuel 1:11,28).
- Anna is an example of a woman staying single in spiritual devotion to the Lord (Luke 2:36-38).
- Human sacrifice was a horrible abomination to Jehovah, and Jephthah knew the Law of Moses.
- His knowledge of the Law is seen by at least his perfect discourse with Ammon and his vow.
- The commandment “Thou shalt not kill” overshadows any precept about paying foolish vows.
- The Spirit does not add any condemning statement about any horrible thing done (Judges 19:30).
- If this man killed and burned his delightful daughter, why no word of rebuke from the Lord?
- Jephthah was not foolish and impulsive, as indicated by his peaceful talk to Ammon (12-28).
- The folly of a premeditated human sacrifice does not fit well with the character described.
- With two months, the nation would have rescued the girl, as they did Jonathan (I Sam 14:24-46).
- With two months time, priests or others could easily have shown Jephthah against burning her.
- A father’s authority in Israel could keep a daughter from marriage (Ex 22:16-17; I Cor 7:36-38).
- The vow itself can easily allow an elliptical sense of a burnt offering of things allowable (30-31).
- The presence of the Spirit of the Lord does not guarantee perfection, but He was there (29-31).
- He worded his vow in such a way as to certainly include a person coming forth to meet him.
- We reject the marginal readings of 31 and 40, which clearly provide for her perpetual virginity.
- It was not unusual for men to vow “singular vows” of great sacrifice of persons to God’s service.
- Jephthah could redeem a person from a singular, or special, vow like this for a fee (Lev 27:1-8).
- The high priest would not have performed such a sacrifice of killing and burning his daughter.
- Surely he did not intend to offer the family dog for a sacrifice, if one had come out to meet him.
- Jonadab held his sons for many generations to restrictions against wine and other things (Jer 35).
- Unstated, but understood, conditions are not rare in the Word of God (Isaiah 38:1; Jonah 3:4).
- If perpetual singleness is so hard, why the New Testament order (I Cor 7:39-40; I Tim 5:11-12).
- Paul taught that an unmarried woman cares for the Lord’s things more than a wife (I Cor 7:34).
- When Scripture wants to say a woman had no children, it knows how to say it (II Samuel 6:23).
- There are a few reasons to indicate that Jephthah might have killed and burned his daughter.
- The sound of the words in 31 and 39 definitely lean toward killing and burning her as a sacrifice.
- Due to the state of the nation and their neighbors, child sacrifice was not as foreign to them.
- Jephthah thought himself to have made a devoted vow that could not be changed (Lev 27:28-29).
- He might have thought God would intervene as in the case of Isaac with Abraham (Gen 22:13).
- He thought it better to kill his daughter than to break a vow, hoping for God’s mercy in the deed.
- Regardless of the position you take, the lessons from their lives are not altered in the least degree.
- It is possible the Holy Spirit left the story so vague as to confuse speculation about the vow.
- Whether perpetual virginity in devotion to God or a burnt sacrifice, Jephthah was committed.
- Whether perpetual virginity in devotion to God or a burnt sacrifice, the daughter was submissive.
The Lessons
- Regardless of the position you take on the vow, the valuable lessons of their lives are not altered.
- Jephthah had a horrible childhood, disadvantaged youth, and severe discrimination; but these things did not affect a faithful, God-fearing man. Discrimination is the common excuse of lazy men, who would rather blame someone else than work hard.
- He did not hold bitterness about the past, which only hurts the fool holding the bitter envy and strife.
- He was pious in doing everything publicly before the LORD in undertaking his office and campaign.
- He was a peacemaker, in spite of his upbringing, by trying to save Ammon and Ephraim from war.
- Her appealed to the LORD for military victory, rather than merely trusting in the arm of the flesh.
- Jephthah’s vow was similar to Jacob’s vow, even though God had promised him (Gen 28:20-22).
- He did not go back on his vow, though it meant great sacrifice for both himself and his daughter.
- He was a mighty man of valor, which affected his daughter in the courage and piety she showed.
- He had a wonderful relationship with his daughter as shown by the exchange and events at the end.
- We should consider vows carefully, lest we sin foolishly with our lips (Ec 5:2-6; Pr 20:25; Ps 15:4).
- His daughter was so cheerful for her father, who had won a great victory over the Ammonites.
- His daughter was so willing to be sacrificed to fulfill the vow, as Jonadab’s sons were also (Jer 35).
- She did not escape from him, surely a temptation, while being gone from him for two months.
- She honored her father in an exceeding costly way, no matter how you understand the sacrifice.
- She had good friends who lamented with her over her obedience in this costly matter (Pr 17:17).
- Israel’s daughters showed great compassion in remembering the sacrifice of Jephthah’s daughter.